If there's one thing we'd bet no production Rimac Nevera will do, it's slide around in the mud. Most will be sparingly driven on pavement through perfect weather to local Cars & Coffee events, only to be tucked into climate-controlled garages all other days of the week. The pre-production car you see above is set to be used as a crash test mule for U.S. homologation, so company founder Mate Rimac figured he'd give it a proper sendoff by drifting it around the dirt and mud.
This dark-blue Nevera is Rimac's first pre-series car, meaning it was the first car to come off the production line. It's used to make sure everything would go smoothly once production actually kicks off. It's been put through dozens of track and road tests, as well as customer previews, media drives, and show events. In fact, this was the very Nevera our friends at Road & Track drove for their review.
Because the car needs to be crashed to satisfy the U.S.'s homologation rules, Mate thought it a good idea to use the car to put on a show at the build site of the company's future factory, which is currently just a dirt lot. He doesn't hold back one bit, pulling off massive slides through the dirt and slinging tons of mud right at the camera. By the end of the day, the whole car was covered.
It's unlikely any future Nevera owner would do this with their own car, so we're glad Mate was brave enough to have a bit of fun in this one before it's inevitably driven into a wall at high speed.
From: Road & Track